SINTEF Ocean has been recently delivered a 6 meter long 3D printed ship model to be used for experiments in the ocean basin. Right now, this is the largest 3D-printed model in Norway.

"This is an experiment on our part" explains research leader Sigmund Kyrre Ås "in connection with the new Ocean Space Center, we are considering acquiring such a 3D printer ourselves, so that we can print models instead of building them manually".

Replaces PVC foam and wood

Today, the models are made of PVC foam and wood. PVC foam is a relatively soft material that is easy to process, modify and adapt. On 3D printed models, they are not as easy to change as they are made of hard plastic, but they are significantly cheaper and faster to produce. Production takes place in two stages; first, the plastic is deposited in several layers to form the geometry of the model. In the next step, the outer surface is milled down to the correct dimension and the model gets the surface finish.

We hope to be able to halve the production time by printing a model compared to today's method, which in turn gives a significant reduction in the number of working hours, Sigmund explains.

We are becoming more competitive

If we switch to using such models, we can become more competitive. The goal is to produce models with better accuracy, while reducing costs and production time. It may then be more appropriate to run more models per project, or make hull changes by printing over previous models. Streamlining model production will be important to utilize the capacity of the new sea basin and ocean laboratory planned in Ocean Space Centre.

The new model will soon be instrumented and tested in the towing tank, which will provide useful experience on how such models should be constructed. In addition, we will be better equipped to provide input to the supplier so that they can tailor a system that works well for model building. We will run drag tests of the model with different surface finishes, and compare with an identical model made of PVC foam and wood.

“Eyewitness News” interviewed Chip Storie – CEO of Ingersoll Machine Tools Inc - who expresses enthusiasm and satisfaction in taking part in the realization of the GMT, the revolutionary telescope to study the deep space.

Ingersoll Machine Tools has been selected among the most important groups at international level to make the precision steel structure that supports and maintains the GMT in position.

Chip Storie, interviewed in the video, recalls the importance of the experience gained in constructing the rotator for the most powerful solar telescope in the world, the Daniel K. Inouye (DKIST) installed in Hawaii.

The Camozzi Group company is producing and assembling the 1,300 tons precision steel mechanism that will support and keep in place the seven largest mirrors in the world that will follow the movement of celestial bodies.

The telescope will be placed at Las Campanas Observatory in the Atacama Desert, in Chile and will allow to overcome the current frontiers of astronomy.

The structure will be delivered by the end of 2025 in Chile and should be ready to house the mirrors in 2027.

A new initiative from Ferrari as part of the countermeasures against COVID-19. Designed in just five weeks, a reliable, versatile, easy to use and assemble ventilator, to optimise oxygen consumption. Produced using easily available materials at a lower cost than currently available pulmonary ventilators.

Maranello, 13 May 2020 - Scuderia Ferrari Mission Winnow and the Italian Institute of Technology have joined forces to come up with a pulmonary ventilator that can be used by hospitals as a vital tool when dealing with emergencies such as the current COVID-19 virus global pandemic.

The project goes by the codename FI5: the letters being the initials of the Maranello marque and the reseach institute based in Genoa, while the number indicates the number of weeks required to produce a fully functioning prototype, starting from a clean sheet of paper.

FI5 is just one in a series of initiatives set up by Ferrari and IIT. Over the past few weeks, the Maranello company has launched various corona virus health care projects, including direct financial support for the Modena area, as well as the production of valves for pulmonary respirators and fittings for protective masks, as well as the “Back on Track” programme, born out of the collaboration with a pool of virologists and experts, with the support of the Emilia Romagna area, with the aim of ensuring the safety of the company’s working environment, as from the moment production restarted last week.

How did the idea of FI5 come about? It began with a call from IIT, and a desire to make generally available to everyone going through this emergency in Italy and indeed in the rest of the world, not only the excellent production facilities and support for the many initiatives in the area put in place by Ferrari, but also the creativity, quick reaction times and know-how that are part of the DNA of a Formula 1 team like the Scuderia.

FI5 has been designed to meet the typical demands of medium intensive care; reliable, versatile, easy to use and assemble, able to optimise oxygen consumption and being produced in volume, using easily available materials, so as to have a far lower cost than currently available pulmonary ventilators. The technical specification of FI5, the drawings, the firmware, software and list of components are now available as an open source project, which means anyone can produce it. In fact, some Italian, Mexican and United States companies have already contacted Ferrari and IIT to move on to certifying and distributing the product. IIT, through connections to all European research centres, will put the project on the DIH-HERO network, used for robotic technologies in health care.

Involved in the project was the Scuderia working group, headed up by Simone Resta, Head of Chassis Engineering and Corrado Onorato, F1 Innovation Manager, with support from members of the Gestione Sportiva and the GT department, while IIT put together a research and engineering team coordinated by Marco Maggiali, Facility Coordinator Icub Tech and Andrea Pagnin, IIT’s research manager. Initially, they came up with a list of essential requirements, partly arrived at thanks to the experience gathered from various hospitals, including Milan’s Niguarda Hospital and the Policlinico San Martino Hospital in Genoa. The Camozzi Group also played a vital role in identifying some essential components, also experimenting with its own products in order to provide data useful for the simulation models.

There were five phases to the project, from design to simulation to the choice and supply of components to the production and testing of the prototype. The Scuderia’s engineers did the CAD design work, to define the pneumatic and mechanical parts and dynamic simulation. IIT sourced all the materials and designed the electronics, the firmware and the control software, also playing its part in the simulation, development and design of the wiring system and also made use of the Scuderia’s supply chain. All the work was carried out with a rigorous respect of the process logic, ensuring compliance with the necessary requirements in terms of safety and reliability, so that it could be effectively used in the field.

The first prototype was assembled last week at IIT headquarters in Genoa and underwent and sailed through all the functionality tests. Furthermore, analysis has already begun to see what further developments can be introduced. Just as in the world of Formula 1, those taking part in this unusual partnership between Scuderia Ferrari and IIT have never stopped thinking of ways to improve the product, be it a racing car or a pulmonary ventilator!

“The challenge of COVID-19 was one we wanted to take on. FI5 is the contribution we made as the Scuderia, fielding the very essence of what makes a Formula 1 team and more importantly, all the characteristics that make Ferrari special; its passion, its creativity and its desire to improve. This project was a very stimulating experience as well as being truly rewarding for all those involved, who worked side by side with our colleagues from IIT and the other partners. It is initiatives like these that make #essereFerrari, not just a slogan but a distinctive feature of our identity.”

“The technological transfer of research is one of the central elements of our strategy. There are several projects that are taking shape along these lines. However, what we have done with Ferrari goes further than that. It is a project initiated because of an urgent health emergency in our society to which we have responded very quickly thanks to the combination of the Scuderia that is the pride of our nation and famous around the world, and a research centre that is at the forefront of internationally respected scientific institutions. Spurred on by Ferrari’s practice of working at speed, we designed and built the prototype in just five weeks. FI5 is an example of the ingenuity, technology and determination which are an essential part of our procedures. But more than that, it shows that this is a country that works and wins. "

"During the height of the Covid-19 emergency, faced with the need for ventilators, IIT came up with the idea of creating a portable device that could quickly made generally available. Within just a few hours, the IIT engineers brought Ferrari on board to set up an innovative project that would involve aspects of fluid dynamics, something at which the Maranello team excels. After five weeks, the result was the FI5, a device that can be used in hospitals around the world after undergoing any national certification requirements. We can deliver an innovative machine for use to the whole world free of charge. It is effective, advanced and performs well, while also being safe and durable. I would call it the first “Racing Ventilator.”

Lodovico Camozzi, president and CEO of the Camozzi group:

"We are proud to have been involved in this project with our staff and skills to design FI5, a truly wonderful story of collaboration and all-Italian innovation that gives us hope for the future."

Milano Ventilatore Meccanico (MVM): certified by the FDA and available for production

13 mag 2020

Milano Ventilatore Meccanico (MVM): certified by the FDA and available for production

The innovative assisted breathing device of MVM, born in Italy and developed thanks to a broad international scientific cooperation, has obtained the EUA (Emergency Use Authorization) certification of the Food and Drug Administration and can therefore enter the hospitals of the countries that recognise the US certification.

The rapid spread of CoViD-19 has dramatically predicted a possible shortage of ventilators with respect to the number of patients in many countries.

The innovative MVM device was born from an open access project to be easily and quickly produced anywhere at a low cost:

it is equipped with an advanced control system that enables different ways of ventilation that act effectively but delicately on the lungs.

its simple mechanical design is based on components that are easy to find on the market, so it can be produced on a large scale.

The creator of the project Cristiano Galbiati of GSSI, INFN and Princeton University explains: “MVM represents a paradigmatic case: on the one hand it shows the essential role that basic research has on society, and on the other it highlights the importance of an international and multidisciplinary cooperation to face great challenges. The EUA certification by the FDA is an important milestone: it has turned Milano Ventilatore Meccanico from a project into reality, which we hope will help to save many lives ".

From prototype to crowdfunding

The MVM project was born from the idea and initiative of some scientists involved in research on dark matter, with experiments at the INFN Laboratories of Gran Sasso, and in Canadian laboratories. The creation of sophisticated experimental equipment for research in fundamental physics has allowed the development of specific skills on complex control systems and for the management of gases, similar to those used in lung ventilators.

These experts have started the development of a first ventilator prototype at the technical service center dedicated to respirators of the company SAPIO Life in Vaprio d’Adda, near Bergamo, in cooperation with the Department of Physics of the State University of Milan.

But to bring the MVM ventilator to the patients, the contribution of scientists, clinicians, health professionals and some companies headed by Elemaster was essential:

Elemaster has made a team of more than 40 specialists and its laboratory available for the development of the first units and created the entire electronic part of the ventilator and subsequently presented the project to the FDA for certification.

After testing and qualifying processes of the performance of the first prototype with breathing simulators, it was possible to create the first industrialised prototype in a few weeks which proved correctness and feasibility of the conceptual design.

MVM is made up of pneumatic solenoid valves and not of mechanical switches. Its modular design adapts well to the exchange of components based on availability in different parts of the world. The design of the ventilator is of open access.

The final project will be published on arXiv.org and will be granted under license according to CERN OHL v2.0 by the Air Foundation. ­

The members of the MVM International Cooperation have undertaken this project using their own resources and have set up a crowdfunding campaign.

Partners

The INFN (National Institute for Nuclear Physics) coordinated the development of electronics. In a few days, the researchers designed the prototype of the board that houses the microcontroller and manages the solenoid valves, pressure and oxygen sensors and created the Graphic User Interface that allows to view the patient's vital parameters on an LCD display.

GSSI - Gran Sasso Science Institute participates in the project from the very beginning with Cristiano Galbiati, full professor of Physics of the GSSI and Prof. Fernando Ferroni, networking and communication facilitator with the scientific community on an international level.

The CNR National Research Council of Italy involved physicists and engineers from the Institute for Plasma Science and Technology (ISTP) and from the Institute of Intelligent Industrial Systems and Technologies for Advanced Manufacturing (STIIMA). The activity of the researchers mainly concerned the optimisation of the circuit and fluidic implementation (valves and regulators), sensors (of flow and pressure), intelligent control and support for clinical validation.

The University of Milano-Bicocca has involved not only its researchers, but also companies, research institutes, anesthesiology doctors of the San Gerardo Hospital in Monza who, thanks to their skills on lung ventilation and clinical experience with COVID-19 patients, were able to define and test the characteristics of the device.

The University of Milan La Statale has been involved since the beginning for the construction of mechanical parts for the first prototype. Currently researchers are involved to contribute in creating the user interface of the device and in preparing the technical documentation of the product.

The University of Bergamo, thanks to several different engineering skills, created and tested a technological solution of a high social impact with the aim of helping to respond quickly.

The University of Naples Federico II is one of the proponents of the MVM project with Giuliana Fiorillo, full professor at the Department of Physics 'Ettore Pancini', and member of the international coordination group that maintains contacts with all those who want to offer contributions as well as with researchers / companies of third countries who want to replicate the project.

The University of Pisa participates in the project to verify the absence of potentially harmful compounds released by the materials and components that make up the ventilator.

Main foreign institutions

Collaboration has grown rapidly also internationally, including the CNL, TRIUMF, SNOLAB and the Mc Donald Institute, under guidance of the Nobel Prize winner Arthur McDonald of the Queen’s University from Canada, scientists of Fermilab, of the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory and different other universities from the United States. From Europe, researchers of the IN2P3 Institute of the CNRS in France have joined the project, as well as the CIEMAT laboratory in Spain and the National Centre for Nuclear Research in Poland and several other Institutes and Universities.

"We participated with great enthusiasm in the development of the MVM project," comments the Nobel Prize winner in Physics Arthur McDonald. "Personally, it has been an extraordinary experience to collaborate in an international team covering such a wide range of skills, working hard to help save human lives in this difficult time."

Brescia – 11 May - Crédit Agricole Italy and SACE united again to sustain the growth of Italian companies. In this operation, Crédit Agricole has granted a loan guaranteed by SACE intended to support the growth plans in Italy and the world of the Camozzi Group, Italian multinational leader in the production of components and systems for industrial automation but also present in the fields of special machine tools, spinning machines and processing of raw materials. The loan guaranteed by SACE - as part of its traditional operations for the benefit of export activities of Italian companies - has a total value of 40 million € over a period of 6 years and is aimed at supporting the Group's future investment plan related to both national and international growth.

The Camozzi Group is among the world leaders of the "Industry 4.0 revolution" with a production management model based on interconnecting physical and digital systems, complex analyses of big data that result in real time adaptation. The Group can also boast significant research projects regarding smart automation, energy efficiency and the use of innovative materials. “Crédit Agricole Italy is proud to be alongside companies of excellence like Camozzi, especially in this difficult period. We want to support the Italian entrepreneurial scene in a concrete way and be a partner of reference, not only financially speaking, and find new development opportunities together, offering consultancy and customised solutions” says Alessio Foletti, Head of the Corporate Banking Department of Crédit Agricole Italy.

Lodovico Camozzi, President and CEO of the Camozzi Group, said: "The attention of Crédit Agricole and SACE in supporting projects that are transforming the manufacturing sector at a global level has been consolidated over time and withtoday's operation they support our Group once again. We are investing with innovative products in important segments for the present and for the future of our society such as Life Science that, like never before with the current emergency, needs constant progress." “Through this operation, we confirm SACE's support to Italian companies of excellence such as Camozzi, that operate on the international market and make export one of their drivers of growth – said Simonetta Acri, Chief Mid Market Officer of SACE -. In such a difficult context in which SACE has been called to back all Italian companies, our intervention to support Camozzi's industrial plan strengthens the growth plans of a group that already boasts a strongly international footprint thanks to 18 production plants over the world and a distribution network in more than 70 countries"

Crédit Agricole Italy Profile

Crédit Agricole is present in Italy, its second domestic market, with about 14 thousand employees and more than 4.5 million customers for more than 77 billion of financing to the economy. The close collaboration between companies present in retail banking, consumer credit, corporate and investment banking, asset management and the insurance sector guarantees Crédit Agricole to operate in Italy with a wide and integrated offer, for the benefit of all economic players. Crédit Agricole Italy is present on the national territory with about 1100 points of sale, around 10,000 employees and more than 2 million customers. www.credit-agricole.it

Camozzi Group Profile

Founded in 1964, this Group is an Italian multinational and leader in the production of components and systems for industrial automation but also present in the fields of special machine tools, spinning machines and numerous other processes of raw material processing. Continuous research and technological development are the basis of the corporate strategy and the drivers guiding this strategy are linked to the constant creation of innovation for its customers, in a development process towards smart manufacturing. The Camozzi Group is present in 75 countries over the world with 30 subsidiaries, 2600 employees, 5 operating divisions and 18 production sites. www.camozzi.com

Sace Profile

SACE is the Italian insurance-financial company specialised in supporting businesses and the national economic scene through a wide variety of tools and solutions to support competitiveness in Italy and worldwide. For over forty years, SACE has been the partner of reference for Italian companies that export and grow on foreign markets forming, together with SIMEST, the export and internationalization division. Furthermore, it cooperates with the banking system to facilitate, through its financial guarantees, companies' access to credit, with a role enhanced by the special measures provided for by the Liquidity Decree. With a portfolio of insured operations and guaranteed investments worth 134 billion €, SACE serves over 23 thousand companies, especially SMEs, supporting their growth in Italy and on approximately 200 foreign markets, with a diversified range of insurance and financial products and services.

Camozzi Group donates 8 lung ventilators to the main Brescia hospitals

26 mar 2020

Camozzi Group donates 8 lung ventilators to the main Brescia hospitals

The Camozzi Group is among the main manufacturing companies of components for the production and operation of lung ventilators around the world. SIARE Engineering requested 20.000 components and 3 types of integrated systems essential for the production of 125 ventilators per week.

Camozzi Group supports the health emergency that has struck the country and especially the Lombardy Region and the Province of Brescia by donating 8 lung ventilators to Spedali Civili and Poliambulanza, the two main hospitals in the city of Brescia mostly involved in assisting the local population affected by the Covid-19 virus.

The donation of 8 ventilators was made possible thanks to the cooperation and supply relationship the Camozzi Group can boast with Siare Engineering, the main manufacturer of ventilators in the country that also produced the 8 instruments donated to the two hospitals in Brescia. Siare Engineering will supply more than 2000 lung ventilators as a priority matter in the coming months, addressed to the Civil Protection Department for different medical facilities all over the country. For this purpose, Camozzi Group received the request from Siare to supply 20.000 components and 3 types of integrated systems. Camozzi Group, through the Camozzi Automation Division, designs and develops components and solutions for the control of fluids for the Life Science sector. The Group produces components and integrated systems for applications using oxygen, just like the ventilators used in the intensive care units The Camozzi components are essential for a proper functioning of those instruments.

Camozzi Automation operates in the Life Science sector for the main world producers – based in the USA, Germany, China, Sweden, Russia, UK, Czech Republic and others (including Medtronic, Getinge, Mindray, Aeonmed) - of medical devices, including the lung ventilators that our national facilities are also importing to cope with the sudden and extraordinary need. The Group will continue to manufacture essential components needed to produce lung respirators all over the world, being a key player in the supply chain, ensuring all measures are implemented to protect the workers and continuing to thoroughly observe all the provisions adopted by the Italian Government, the Lombardy region and the governments of other countries where Camozzi production sites are located.

Lodovico Camozzi, President and CEO of the Camozzi Group, said: “In a historical crisis that deeply affected the community of Brescia, we want to be alongside the health-care facilities and their staff with a concrete and quick initiative to support them. I wish to thank everyone who have helped us in this commitment, starting from all our workers for this great sacrifice and our client Siare Engineering that manufactures the ventilators”.

"The initiative of the Camozzi Group is very well-timed" - declares Marco Trivelli, General Manager of the Spedali Civili hospital of Brescia - “as it enhances our therapeutic line of intensive respiratory support, that is essential to cure the most serious patients, by allowing the lungs to rest and giving space to recover their functionality. Moreover, this donation is comforting and encourages all of us to continue our efforts, unprecedented in our history, to face this devious and violent disease, affecting so many people, with all the energy and intelligence in our power”.

"We thank the Camozzi Group for its important support " - declares Alessandro Triboldi, General Manager of the Poliambulanza Foundation - “Having 4 additional respirators for our hospital means saving human lives in this moment of great difficulty. This is of essential help for our operators who work tirelessly every day to always guarantee the best quality of care, which can only be achieved through the use of the right means of support".